This article is about the college in Cotton, England. For the college in Guwahati, India, see
Cotton University.
Cotton College |
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Other name | Saint Wilfrid's College |
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Religious affiliation(s) | Roman Catholic |
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Established | 1763 |
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Closed | 1987 |
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Cotton College was a Roman Catholic boarding school in Cotton, Staffordshire, United Kingdom. It was also known as Saint Wilfrid's College.
The school buildings were centred on Cotton Hall, a country house used by religious communities from the 1840s until the school moved there in 1873.[1]
The school closed in 1987 and the site is now derelict. The school and its chapel (St Wilfrid's church) are both Grade II listed buildings.[2]
History of the school
The school was founded in 1763 at Sedgley Park School, Wolverhampton – now a hotel. It was founded by William Errington at the recommendation of Bishop Richard Challoner. In 1873 it moved to Cotton Hall.
The school closed in 1987 due to financial difficulties.[3]
Architecture
Cotton Hall
Original building
Cotton Hall appears to date back to 1630[4] and was most probably built by the Morrice family. Thomas Gilbert rebuilt the house in the eighteenth century.
In 1843 Cotton Hall was sold to the Earl of Shrewsbury. The Earl was a prominent Roman Catholic, who lived at Alton Towers nearby. He offered the building to a religious community under the leadership of Frederick William Faber.[5]
Extensions
The house was extended in 1846–1848 for use by the religious community, which started a village school and sought to convert locals to Roman Catholicism. The building work was financed by the Earl, who gave the commission to his architect Augustus Pugin, most famous for his work with Charles Barry on the Houses of Parliament.
After the boarding school moved to Cotton, the building was further extended in 1874-1875, 1886-1887 and 1931-1932.[2]
St Wilfrid's Church
As well as extending the house, Pugin designed a chapel in Gothic Revival style linked to the main building by a single-storey passage building.[2][3] It has a south-west tower with a broach spire.
St Wilfrid's Church remained intact after the closure of the school, although regular services are no longer held there.[1]
Notable alumni
See also
References
External links
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Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Birmingham |
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- Churches
- St John the Evangelist, Banbury
- St Francis of Assisi, Bedworth
- Birmingham Oratory
- Erdington Abbey, Birmingham
- Our Lady Help of Christians, Tile Cross, Birmingham
- Our Lady and St Brigid, Northfield, Birmingham
- Our Lady and St Rose of Lima, Weoley Castle, Birmingham
- St Anne, Birmingham
- St Catherine of Siena, Birmingham
- St Edward, Selly Park, Birmingham
- St Francis of Assisi, Handsworth, Birmingham
- St Mary, Harborne, Birmingham
- St Michael, Birmingham
- St Mary and St Modwen, Burton-on-Trent
- St Giles, Cheadle
- Holy Trinity, Chipping Norton
- St Osburg, Coventry
- St Peter and St Paul and St Elizabeth, Coughton
- Sacred Heart and St Catherine, Droitwich Spa
- Our Lady and St Alphonsus, Hanley Swan
- Our Lady of Lourdes Church, Hednesford
- St Peter, Leamington Spa
- St Wulstan, Little Malvern
- Holy Trinity, Newcastle-under-Lyme
- Our Lady of the Angels, Nuneaton
- St Anne, Nuneaton
- Oxford Oratory
- St Edmund and St Frideswide, Oxford
- St Anthony of Padua, Oxford
- Our Lady of Mount Carmel, Redditch
- St Marie, Rugby
- St Joseph and St Etheldreda, Rugeley
- St Chad and All Saints, Sedgley
- St Augustine of England, Solihull
- St Austin, Stafford
- Our Lady of the Angels and St Peter in Chains, Stoke-on-Trent
- St Mary, Uttoxeter
- St Mary, Walsall
- Our Lady and St Hubert, Warley
- St Mary Immaculate, Warwick
- St Mary and St John, Wolverhampton
- St Peter and St Paul, Wolverhampton
- St George, Worcester
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- Patronal Feasts of the Diocese
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- Schools
- Archbishop Ilsley Catholic School
- Bishop Challoner Catholic College
- Bishop Milner Catholic College
- Bishop Ullathorne Roman Catholic School
- Bishop Walsh Catholic School
- Blessed Edward Oldcorne Catholic College
- Blessed George Napier Roman Catholic School
- Blessed William Howard Catholic School
- Cardinal Griffin Catholic College
- Cardinal Newman Catholic School and Community College
- Cardinal Wiseman Catholic School, Coventry
- Cardinal Wiseman Catholic School, Birmingham
- Greyfriars Catholic School
- Hagley Roman Catholic High School
- Holy Trinity Catholic Academy of Stafford and Stone
- Holy Trinity Catholic School, Birmingham
- John Henry Newman Catholic College
- The Oratory Preparatory School
- The Oratory School
- Our Lady and St Chad Catholic Academy
- Painsley Catholic College
- Princethorpe College
- Rye St Antony School
- St Augustine's High School, Redditch
- St Benedict's Catholic High School, Alcester
- St Dominic's Grammar School
- St Dominic's Priory School, Stone
- St Edmund Campion Catholic School
- St Edmund's Catholic Academy
- St Francis of Assisi Catholic College
- St John Fisher Catholic College
- St John Wall Catholic School
- St Joseph's College, Stoke-on-Trent
- St Margaret Ward Catholic Academy
- St Mary Immaculate Catholic Primary School
- St Paul's School for Girls, Birmingham
- St Peter's Catholic School, Solihull
- St Thomas Aquinas Catholic School, Birmingham
- St Thomas More Catholic Academy
- St Thomas More Catholic School, Nuneaton
- St Thomas More Catholic School, Willenhall
- Stuart Bathurst Catholic High School
- Trinity Catholic School
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Current | |
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Former |
- St Mary's College, Aberystwyth
- Sacred Heart College, Bath
- St Joseph's College, Mark Cross
- Campion House, Osterley
- St Hugh's College, Tollerton
- St Michael's College, Underley Hall
- St Joseph's College, Upholland
- St Cuthbert's College, Ushaw
- St Edmund's College, Ware
- St John's Seminary, Wonersh
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53°0′55″N 1°54′13″W / 53.01528°N 1.90361°W / 53.01528; -1.90361